The Edward Snowden debate took a new turn over the weekend when reporters Glenn Greenwald and David Gregory got into a heated discussion about the journalism involved behind the scenes of the saga surrounding the NSA leaker.
Greenwald, the writer who interviewed Snowden for The Guardian
newspaper earlier this month, was asked to answer about his own
actions during an appearance on NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday
after a question was raised about the whereabouts of the leaker.
Snowden was thought to be in Hong Kong until news erupted over
the weekend that he had arrived in Moscow en route to perhaps
another locale.
When the conversation turned toward what information if any
Greenwald knew about Snowden’s location, The Guardian journalist
declined to provide Meet the Press host Gregory with any details.
“To the extent that you have aided and abetted Snowden, even
in his current movements, why shouldn’t you, Mr. Greenwald, be
charged with a crime?” Gregory asked.

“If you want to embrace that theory, it means that every
investigative journalist in the United States who works with
their sources, who receives classified information is a criminal,
and it’s precisely those theories and precisely that climate that
has become so menacing in the United States,” Greenwald
replied.
Gregory responded that “the question of who is a journalist
may be up to a debate with regard to what you are doing,” but
later had to defend his actions when Greenwald took the argument
to Twitter.
“Who needs the government to try to criminalize journalism
when you have David Gregory to do it,” Greenwald tweeted
shortly after.
On his part, Gregory incorporated the tweet in a later broadcast
on Sunday. “This is the problem from somebody who claims that
he’s a journalist who would object to a journalist raising
questions, which is not actually embracing any particular point
of view,” Gregory said.
“There’s a question about his role in this, The Guardian’s
role in all of this. It is actually part of the debate,”
Gregory said. “Rather than going after the questioner, he
could take on the issues. And he had an opportunity to do that
here on Meet the Press.”
An indictment against Mr. Snowden was unsealed on Friday,
signaling the seriousness of the Obama administration’s
prosecution of the former intelligence contractor who’s admitted
to leaking National Security Agency documents to The Guardian.
Snowden faces potentially decades in prison, and his whereabouts
as of Monday remain unknown. That morning, WikiLeaks founder
Julian Assange told reporters that Snowden “is in a safe place
and his spirits are high,” but added, “Due to the
bellicose threats coming from the US administration we cannot go
into further detail at this time.”
If Greenwald indeed assisted in arranging for the transportation
of a known fugitive, the White House may be more inclined to
press charges against the journalist. According to federal law,
not just the communication of privileged intelligence is a crime,
but the publishing of it too.
In a profile of Greenwald earlier this month, the New York Times
portrayed the reporter as a blogger whose work has border-lined
on legitimate journalism while straddling the tendency to
“intensely, even obsessively” focus on surveillance within
the United States.
“I approach my journalism as a litigator,” Greenwald, a
trained attorney, told the paper. “People say things, you
assume they are lying, and dig for documents to prove it.” He
also described himself to the paper as an activist and an
advocate.
That isn’t to say, though, that Gregory isn’t let off the hook
for the ethics involved in his own journalistic organization. NBC
News is owned by General Electric, whose CEO sits on President
Obama’s economic advisory board. GE Capital also received a $139
loan guarantee via the Wall Street bailout.
This article originally appeared on: RT




